Tuesday, February 25, 2020

Top 10 Cubs Players of All Time!


Photo courtesy of Sports World Chicago

Hey, Cubs fans and welcome to the Wrigley Wrap-Up, a sports blog dedicated to the history, game review and trivia of the Greatest Baseball Team Ever!

To start off, I want to introduce my top 10 of best Cubs players of all time. But… what makes a great Cub? Before we dig in to the greatest Cubbies of all time, it is necessary to lay some ground rules:
       
      1) I will only use statistics from that player during their time with the Cubs.

      2) The majority of their playing time was with the Cubs, especially their prime years.

That’s it…pretty simple? Let’s get going so you can yell at me later!

NOTE: For non-pitchers, I will be using the traditional splits (Batting Average/On Base %/ Slugging %) and WAR. For pitchers, I will be using Wins-Losses (W-L), ERA, and WAR

***WAR is a statistical measurement that shows a player’s ability to contribute to his team’s wins over a replacement level player in his same position. For our purposes, the more WAR, the better the player.

And for those too afraid to ask, here is a link to great beginner’s guide 

10. Lewis Robert “Hack” Wilson
Photo courtesy of  sabr.org

Stats: .322/.412/.590; 31.1 WAR (6 seasons)

Bio: What’s in a name? Hack Wilson says it all. This fan-beloved centerfielder from the Prohibition-era Cubs that harkens back to a time when Wrigley with old white guys in cotton suits, sweating profusely as 18 roustabouts duked it out on the pitch before them. Sometimes literally. And Hack was notorious for starting fights with opposing players and managers. 

In addition to being a reliable starter for the Cubs, he was also known for being arrested and knocking the back windows of police cruisers. A much loved early Cubbie, he still fascinates the curiosity of Cubs all around.





9. Sammy Sosa

Stats: .284/.358/.569; 58.8 WAR (13 seasons)

Photo courtesy of Roy Dabner, AP
Bio: While in recent years, his reputation with ownership has been strained at best and his Pinterest page is amazingly strange, it can’t be forgotten that, at one time, this 7-time All-Star captured the hearts and minds of many young Cubs fans (including yours truly). Many of us will never forget the glorious summer in ‘98 when Sammy and Mark McGuire faced off bat-to-bat in home run race trying to chase down Hank Aaron’s long-held long-ball record. 

Besides this, his contributions both on the field as a great hitter and good fielder, and his off-the-field persona as all around Nice Guy, Sammy has endeared himself to great many of us.

8. Billy Williams

Photo courtesy of National Baseball Hall of Fame
Stats: .296/.364/.503; 61.8 WAR (16 seasons)

Bio: Along with Ernie Banks and Fergie Jenkins, Sweet Swingin’ Billy is the completes the trifecta of a team that boasted some of the Most Important Cubs of all time. Playing on some of the most underperforming Cubs teams of the 20th century, Billy still managed to show up to work almost every day, being dubbed Iron Man and setting a National League in most consecutive games played (long before that poser Cal Ripken, Jr). With his tenacious playing style and infectious smile, Sweet Billy is remembered fondly by the old-timers and is respected by the generations that came after.





7. Charles Leo “Gabby” Hartnett
Photo courtesy of Detroit Public Library

Stats: .297/.370/.489; 59.1 WAR (19 seasons)

Bio: To remind the reader how ridiculously crazy the 1920s and 1930s were in the history of baseball, Gabby got his start on the Cubs after the starter, Bob O’Farrell, had his SKULL BUSTED OPEN by an errant pitch while catching in a game. Gabby played for 19 seasons in that environment and was consistently one of the best players in his era by both statistical reporting and on-field observations.

While notoriously quiet, Gabby’s playing style roared with passion and love for the game. A well-remembered and quintessential Cub, for sure.






6. Kerry Wood
Photo courtesy of the Associated Press


Stats: W-L: 80-68; ERA: 3.67; 25.5 WAR (12 seasons)

Bio: Our first pitcher! This one’s for my 10-year-old self, so indulge me for a second. On May 6th, 1998, Kerry threw a one-hit shutout game against the Astros. To accomplish this feat, Wood threw 20 strikeouts and drew no walks in a match that has gone down in history as easily one of the greatest pitching performances of all time.

That performance along with Sammy’s home run chase later in the season, solidified my fanhood with the Cubs. Regardless of his rapidly declining performance in following seasons, this one moment in time elevates him to a stature beyond measure. Thank you, Kerry!



5. Ron Santo
Photo courtesy of the New York Times


Stats: .279/.366/.472; 70.5 WAR (14 seasons)

Bio: The Cubs fan Cubs fan. Ron Santo loved the Chicago Cubs so much that he was the first player to invoke his no trade clause by refusing to sign with the Angels in 1973. A mainstay in Chicago until his death in 2010, Santo is as close to “bleeding Cubbie blue” as you can get without being name Ernie Banks.

On the field, Santo had one of the highest year-over-year WAR as any player on this list, and his contributions definitely felt. After retiring from the field in 1974, Santo then joined the Cubs broadcasting team in 1990 as a color commentator.

4: Ferguson “Fergie” Jenkins

Photo courtesy of the Canadian Baseball Hall of Fame


Stats: W-L: 167-132; ERA: 3.20; 52.9 WAR (10 seasons)

Bio: Like any good Cubs player, Fergie is an oddity. First, he is a Canadian, the first Canuck to be inducted in to the Hall of Fame and the first to win a Cy Young award.

 Second, Fergie performed really well as a pitcher in what was considered one of the friendliest “hitter’s parks” in the National League. 

Third, the man played with the Harlem Globetrotters during the 1967-1969 seasons while not playing baseball. Fergie had a career to remember and a life worth hearing about!




3. Anthony Rizzo

Photo courtesy of Ron Vesely

Stats: .277/.376/.496; 32.7 WAR (9 seasons)

Bio: The picture here captures the Cubs infielders embracing Montgomery, the closer, after the last out of the 2016 World Series. After break the 107-year World Series drought, the man who has jumped the highest with the biggest grin on his face is Anthony Rizzo. This photo perfectly encapsulates Anthony Rizzo as a Cubs player. In 2013, he signed a team-friendly contract, one of the friendliest in the free agency era. In how he comports himself, Rizzo loves being a Cub and I, for one, am so glad he’s here. Vive Rizzo!






2. Ryne “Ryno” Sandberg

Stats: .285/.344/.452; 68.1 WAR (15 seasons)

Photo courtesy of Getty Images North America
Bio: In a time when smoking a cigarette and guzzling a can of beer was considered appropriate pre-game form, Ryne Sandberg came on the scene like a Greek god. Athletically powerful, with grace and poise, Ryno was destined to be a great player. However, his time to become one of the greatest Cubs players came in 1984.

On June 23rd, Sandberg, still a young and not yet proven player, faced off against the Cardinals’ shut-down closer in the bottom of the ninth inning and belted a frozen over the left field to tie the game. That wasn’t the end of the heroics. In the tenth, the Cardinals went up 2 runs against the Cubs when once again Sandberg stepped up to the plate. With 2 outs and one man on, Sandberg belted his 2nd homer of the day to tie it up. Here’s Harry Caray to help you understand the magnitude. This game, of course, has become known as “The Sandberg Game.” In the intervening years, Ryno was a workhorse for the Cubs and is still thought of very fondly.

1. Ernie “Mr. Cub” Banks
Photo courtesy of the Wall Street Journal
Stats: .274/.330/.500; 67.5 WAR (19 seasons)

Bio: With a nickname like Mr. Cub, who’s gonna stop Ernie from being at the top? To get poetic for a moment, Ernie is the embodiment of a sun-soaked late May afternoon when the birds are chirping and everyone is itching to smell the leather and hear the crack of the bat. Of all his quips, his most famous is unquestionably, "It's a beautiful day for a ballgame ... Let's play two!"
Unflappably cheerful, he was also undeniably loyal to the club that signed him to his first and only major deal. 

After his retirement from playing in 1971, Banks became a mainstay in and around the Cubs organization for the next 40 years until his death in 2015. Number 14 will remain now and for a long time, the great Cubs player to have ever played the game.